Appears to be from Kings Mountain, N.C.. Simulcasting 1450 WGNC. Not very strong and sporadic inside the Charlotte, NC Reception Area... Steve.
However, this also means no ability to get WROQ 101.1 FM in the Charlotte Metro Area going forward.
No big surprise since WROQ's COL is 130 miles away.
This is true. Not really a need to listen to WROQ in the Charlotte Area anyway these days, especially since it isn't even the Original "95Q The Album Station" that served Charlotte so many years ago. So no major loss it would seem.
Steve.
I definitely would rather listen to WROQ over WRFX any day. At least WROQ plays some Classic Rock songs you haven't heard a thousand times on FM radio unlike WRFX. I could previously listen to WROQ driving around Blowing Rock (with occasional interference from WYMY) until the Gastonia translator signed on, but it still comes in good at my house at least. On top of that, the 101.5 translator in Shelby has pretty much wiped out reception of WQUT here as well, so our selection of Classic Rock stations is dwindling as these translators keep signing on. But since I've been listening to satellite radio for the past year or so, it doesn't affect me too much.
Yet another case of an annoying translator wiping out the clear signal of a distant full power station.
Seriously? Back when I used to listen to WOLS, which was WNMX, WMMY would cause it no end of trouble in certain areas. Nowhere near Blowing Rock, either.106.1 WMMY - 18.7 mi. --> WOLS - 99.4 mi.
Seriously? Back when I used to listen to WOLS, which was WNMX, WMMY would cause it no end of trouble in certain areas. Nowhere near Blowing Rock, either.
FM was never intended to be a long distance service like AM. Typically the protected contour for FM is about 65-70 miles. This is 130 miles away serving a completely different market in a completely different state. No promise that this signal should reach Charlotte, and the station probably doesn't sell local advertising in Charlotte, so they don't care. Local radio is supposed to be local.
The legal spacing may have looked good on paper to some bureaucrat in DC, but a real world investigation before approval would have told them otherwise. And stations have historically for years overlapped and served more than 1 market.